Surratt Hilary L, Otachi Janet K, McLouth Christopher J, Vundi Nikita
University of Kentucky, Department of Behavioral Science, United States.
University of Kentucky, College of Social Work, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021 Sep 1;226:108878. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.108878. Epub 2021 Jun 25.
The HIV epidemic is increasingly penetrating rural areas of the U.S. due to evolving epidemics of injection drug use. Many rural areas experience deficits in availability of HIV prevention, testing and harm reduction services, and confront significant stigma that inhibits care seeking. This paper examines enacted stigma in healthcare settings among rural people who inject drugs (PWID) and explores associations of stigma with continuing high-risk behaviors for HIV.
PWID participants (n = 324) were recruited into the study in three county health department syringe service programs (SSPs), as well as in local community-based organizations. Trained interviewers completed a standardized baseline interview lasting approximately 40 min. Bivariate logistic regression models examined the associations between enacted healthcare stigma, health conditions, and injection risk behaviors, and a mediation analysis was conducted.
Stigmatizing health conditions were common in this sample of PWID, and 201 (62.0 %) reported experiencing stigma from healthcare providers. Injection risk behaviors were uniformly associated with higher odds of enacted healthcare stigma, including sharing injection equipment at most recent injection (OR = 2.76; CI 1.55, 4.91), and lifetime receptive needle sharing (OR = 2.27; CI 1.42, 3.63). Enacted healthcare stigma partially mediated the relationship between having a stigmatizing health condition and engagement in high-risk injection behaviors.
Rural PWID are vulnerable to stigma in healthcare settings, which contributes to high-risk injection behaviors for HIV. These findings have critical public health implications, including the importance of tailored interventions to decrease enacted stigma in care settings, and structural changes to expand the provision of healthcare services within SSP settings.
由于注射吸毒流行情况的演变,美国的艾滋病毒疫情正日益渗透到农村地区。许多农村地区在艾滋病毒预防、检测和减少伤害服务的可及性方面存在不足,并面临着抑制人们寻求治疗的严重耻辱感。本文研究了农村注射吸毒者(PWID)在医疗保健环境中所遭受的实际耻辱感,并探讨了耻辱感与持续的艾滋病毒高风险行为之间的关联。
在三个县卫生部门的注射器服务项目(SSP)以及当地社区组织中招募了324名PWID参与者进入该研究。经过培训的访谈员完成了一次持续约40分钟的标准化基线访谈。采用双变量逻辑回归模型研究实际医疗保健耻辱感、健康状况和注射风险行为之间的关联,并进行了中介分析。
在这个PWID样本中,带有耻辱性的健康状况很常见,201人(62.0%)报告称受到了医疗服务提供者的耻辱对待。注射风险行为与实际医疗保健耻辱感的较高几率一致相关,包括在最近一次注射时共用注射设备(OR = 2.76;CI 1.55,4.91)以及终生接受性针头共用(OR = 2.27;CI 1.42,3.63)。实际医疗保健耻辱感部分介导了具有耻辱性健康状况与从事高风险注射行为之间的关系。
农村PWID在医疗保健环境中易受耻辱感影响,这导致了艾滋病毒的高风险注射行为。这些发现具有关键的公共卫生意义,包括采取针对性干预措施以减少医疗环境中的实际耻辱感的重要性,以及进行结构变革以扩大SSP环境中医疗服务的提供。